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Displaying Results 1 - 25 of 27 on page 1 of 2
Marked
Mark
'I'm a rambler, I'm a gambler, I'm a long way from home': exploring participation through music and digital design in dementia care
(2017)
Morrissey, Kellie
'I'm a rambler, I'm a gambler, I'm a long way from home': exploring participation through music and digital design in dementia care
(2017)
Morrissey, Kellie
Abstract:
People with dementia (PWD) living in care are a population commonly termed as ‘vulnerable’, and whose challenging life situations are often described in the literature as being a part of a ‘burden’, both on the part of their families and larger society. The difficult circumstances faced by PWD are often compounded by moving into care, where they can face loneliness, social isolation, and a lack of meaningful experiences. With many millions of people living with the condition worldwide, as well as a lack of available and effective pharmaceutical treatment for dementia, there have been increasing calls for the ‘problem’ of dementia to be addressed through psycho-social pathways, with technological design implicated as one of these. However, the vast majority of extant design research in dementia has focused on alleviating the cognitive problems that come with the condition, leading to a lack of design research that explores experiential aspects of living with dementia. This thesis pre...
http://hdl.handle.net/10468/3524
Marked
Mark
'People think it's not the real world - but it's our world'. The significance of relationships found on the threshold between the private and the public: Exploring engagement between mothers and early years practitioners in a changing Ireland.
(2014)
Garrity, Sheila
'People think it's not the real world - but it's our world'. The significance of relationships found on the threshold between the private and the public: Exploring engagement between mothers and early years practitioners in a changing Ireland.
(2014)
Garrity, Sheila
Abstract:
Irish society has undergone significant economic and social transformation in the past two decades. The rapid development of the early years sector, supporting unprecedented levels of female employment, is indicative of this transformation. While the use of early years services can be perceived as a functional act, the process is also an emotional one, as a parent's basic obligation to care is transferred to another. This thesis focuses on these newly established social and familial behaviours, offering an exploration of relationships between parents and childcare practitioners, within a changing Irish context. The exploratory approach to research employed an ethnographic methodology, underpinned by a social constructionist epistemology to investigate these under-studied relationships. The research findings were analysed through the theoretical lens of the ethic of care, as well as drawing on theories and literature from relevant areas. Key research findings reveal ideas and c...
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/4216
Marked
Mark
Aesthetics and emotion in an organisational ethnography
(2012)
Kenny, Kate
Aesthetics and emotion in an organisational ethnography
(2012)
Kenny, Kate
Abstract:
In this paper, I argue that an aesthetic approach can help us to better understand workplace ethnography. Ethnography is sensory by nature; it can incorporate a feeling of rightness and beauty in the experience of 'being-with' the organisation being studied. The process is inherently aesthetic. I explore this argument with an in-depth account of a researcher's experiences at a non-profit organisation. I identify the aesthetic of belonging that developed over time. This study shows how an aesthetic perspective helps us to understand the day to day experience of ethnography, and how it can be emotionally ambivalent and somewhat dark.
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/2697
Marked
Mark
All of the People all of the Time? Configurations of actors, knowledge and space in the making of local development
(2012)
O'Reilly, Patrick
All of the People all of the Time? Configurations of actors, knowledge and space in the making of local development
(2012)
O'Reilly, Patrick
Abstract:
Local development approaches purport to offer a more effective means of addressing development issues in areas experiencing specific socio-economic challenges. By facilitating local involvement in the identification of the issues affecting such areas and in the selection of development objectives, such approaches claim to build community consensus around programmes which are locally owned and driven. To their proponents, a key element of these programmes is that communities benefit from their participation in them. The process of local development is capable of affecting changes at a personal and a collective level which empower individuals, leading to a more equitable distribution of power and resources. However, while the participative processes through which local development programmes are implemented are seen as critical to their successful outcome, little research exists concerning the dynamic processes through which such programmes are worked out in practice. Consequently, fu...
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/3078
Marked
Mark
Bridging Classroom Language Ethnography
(2012)
GRENFELL, MICHAEL JAMES
Bridging Classroom Language Ethnography
(2012)
GRENFELL, MICHAEL JAMES
Abstract:
Paper #5: Bridging Classroom Language Ethnography, New Literacy Studies and Bourdieu?s Social Philosophy: Principles and Practice The purpose of this paper is to analyze and synthesize the various ways that classroom language ethnography, NLS, and Bourdieu?s social philosophy, were integrated. The goal of the analysis and synthesis is to provide a fresh perspective and fruitful insights on literacy in all its manifestations that provides the foundations for a more robust science of language in education. The four case studies sometimes lack uniformity of approach and they are occasionally partial or messy in their actuality. However, they do provide us with the means to objectify the main elements of our classroom language ethnography from a Bourdieusian perspective. Consequently, they demonstrate the way that Bourdieu?s social philosophy provides us with an understanding that is both stable but dynamic, and that concepts such as field and habitus are central for exploring the r...
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/66945
Marked
Mark
An ethnography of crime in Belfast
(1996)
Brewer, John; Lockhart, William H.; Rodgers, Paula
An ethnography of crime in Belfast
(1996)
Brewer, John; Lockhart, William H.; Rodgers, Paula
Abstract:
In an earlier paper to the Statistical and Social Inquiry Society of Ireland in Dublin, we provided a statistical comparison of trends in indictable crime in both parts of Ireland between 1945 and 1993 set against other survey data on crime, trends in specific offences and geographical variations in crime trends. This drew on data from our larger research project on crime in Ireland since the Second World War. In this paper we intend to report on the ethnographic research conducted as part of the same project. The rationale behind the ethnographic study of crime in two police sub-divisions of Belfast was to use the benefits of the ethnographic method to supplement the quantitative approach to crime trends. The data are drawn from two closely matched police sub-divisions in Belfast, Castlereagh in East Belfast and Woodburn in the West of the city, the former largely Protestant and the latter largely Catholic, reproducing the city?s communal spatial divide. Each sub-division also comp...
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/2141
Marked
Mark
Analogous states: John Millington Synge, Zora Neale Hurston, and the performance of ethnography
(2017)
Mouton Kinyon, Chanté
Analogous states: John Millington Synge, Zora Neale Hurston, and the performance of ethnography
(2017)
Mouton Kinyon, Chanté
Abstract:
The thesis presents J. M. Synge and Zora Neale Hurston as autoethnographic researcher-practitioners who employed important cultural forms in their theatre, such as the keen and the cakewalk, in order to challenge the representational caricatures that contributed to the racialization of both the Irish and African Americans. Using ethnographic material, Synge and Hurston locate such performative rituals in their proper cultural contexts, thereby giving a representation of them that audiences might consider authentic, while also writing against the stereotypes associated with the cultures under discussion. Yet Synge and Hurstonâs claims to authenticity and cultural intimacy, through the use of ethnographic practices, is undermined as the material created was intended for the theatre, an artificial space. Thus, Syngeâs and Hurstonâs flawed research practices reveal moral binds of performance ethnography as cross-cultural studies was becoming a significant aspect of anthropology pr...
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/6925
Marked
Mark
Approaches to Qualitative Research: Theory and Its Practical Application (A Guide for Dissertation Students)
(2009)
Hogan, John; Dolan, Paddy; Donnelly, Paul F.
Approaches to Qualitative Research: Theory and Its Practical Application (A Guide for Dissertation Students)
(2009)
Hogan, John; Dolan, Paddy; Donnelly, Paul F.
Abstract:
<p>Approaches to Qualitative Research: Theory and Its Practical Application (A Guide for Dissertation Students)</p> <p>Oak Tree Press Publishers.</p> <p>ISBN 978 1 904887 31 7</p> <p><a href="https://oaktreepress.eu/">https://oaktreepress.eu/</a></p>
<p>Qualitative research is a multifaceted approach that investigates culture, society and behaviour through an analysis and synthesis of people’s words and actions. Qualitative methods produce compelling knowledge of how and why people behave as they do, whether in organisational, family, personal, or other social roles.</p> <p>The primary objective of this book is to introduce students to the concepts underlying qualitative research and how this kind of research can be conducted in a practical manner. To this end, it discusses various approaches to qualitative research and provides examples of these approaches being carried out in practice. In d...
http://arrow.dit.ie/buschmarbk/23
Marked
Mark
Autoethnography: Proposing a New Research Method for Information Systems Research
(2014)
O Riordan, Niamh
Autoethnography: Proposing a New Research Method for Information Systems Research
(2014)
O Riordan, Niamh
Abstract:
Emerging technologies are facilitating the production of revised and novel forms of 'digital being' - combined frames of meaning, experience, and desired notions of performativity that change what and who we are. A number of theoretical perspectives (e.g. Agential Realism and Sociomateriality) have emerged that seek to address this new reality but have struggled to grapple with the relationship between technology and the things that constitute a human in a psychological sense. In this paper, we argue that IS researchers have been hampered by the paucity of established research methods that are suited for the investigation of emerging digital systems and new forms of digital being. We believe that the IS community has made a serious error by ignoring repeated calls for the use of ethnographic methods in the field. We also feel that autoethnographic methods are highly suited to the task of conducting research on the digitally mediated experiences in everyday activities and i...
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/7462
Marked
Mark
Blame the patient, blame the doctor or blame the system? A meta-synthesis of qualitative studies of patient safety in primary care
(2016)
McSharry, Jennifer
Blame the patient, blame the doctor or blame the system? A meta-synthesis of qualitative studies of patient safety in primary care
(2016)
McSharry, Jennifer
Abstract:
ObjectiveStudies of patient safety in health care have traditionally focused on hospital medicine. However, recent years have seen more research located in primary care settings which have different features compared to secondary care. This study set out to synthesize published qualitative research concerning patient safety in primary care in order to build a conceptual model.MethodMeta-ethnography, an interpretive synthesis method whereby third order interpretations are produced that best describe the groups of findings contained in the reports of primary studies.ResultsForty-eight studies were included as 5 discrete subsets where the findings were translated into one another: patients' perspectives of safety, staff perspectives of safety, medication safety, systems or organisational issues and the primary/secondary care interface. The studies were focused predominantly on issues seen to either improve or compromise patient safety. These issues related to the characteristics o...
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/5853
Marked
Mark
Changing a leopard's spots: A new research direction for organizational culture in the operations management field
(2016)
Marshall, Donna; Metters, Rich; Pagell, Mark
Changing a leopard's spots: A new research direction for organizational culture in the operations management field
(2016)
Marshall, Donna; Metters, Rich; Pagell, Mark
Abstract:
Operations Management (OM) research on organizational culture has to change to be able to inform practice. Currently, organizational culture research in OM is largely confined to narrow topical and methodological niches and culture is most frequently used as an explanatory variable in quantitative, survey-based research. We argue that the relegation of culture to this niche is due to selfimposed methodological blinders that hobble the OM field. We then present four research imperatives to reinvigorate organizational culture research within our field. We urge OM scholars to view culture as a dynamic concept that can be influenced, to adopt alternative methods, to use non-traditional data sources, and to rethink assumptions about dependent variables. We also identify gaps in the current knowledge and new research questions for the OM domain. We conclude that the field of OM could greatly expand its understanding of organizational culture and in so doing greatly improve business practi...
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/7657
Marked
Mark
Chronigami: Folding and unfolding Time
(1995)
Kavanagh, Donncha; Araujo, Luis
Chronigami: Folding and unfolding Time
(1995)
Kavanagh, Donncha; Araujo, Luis
Abstract:
Time is a construct or variable that is fundamental to a variety of theories of organizational change and strategic planning, as well as numerous mid-range models such as the product life cycle. In virtually all of these models, time is assumed to be unproblematic, independent, 'out there', and unilinear; time follows its own arrow. In contrast, a long standing tradition of research in the social sciences points out that time is socially constructed and that in any society a repertoire of chronological codes is employed. This paper seeks to build on the constructivist understanding of time by presenting a multi-layered view of time and by attempting to illustrate the processes through which time is constructed. In doing so, it draws heavily on actor-network theory with its emphasis on the heterogeneous processes involved in the construction of nature and society. This use of actor-network theory is illustrated with field material from a longitudinal, ethnographic study of ...
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/5821
Marked
Mark
Codes in Transition: A Folk Linguistic Exploration of the Irish Traveller Cant
(2015)
RIEDER, MARIA
Codes in Transition: A Folk Linguistic Exploration of the Irish Traveller Cant
(2015)
RIEDER, MARIA
Abstract:
The Irish Traveller community is traditionally a nomadic minority group that has very much held on to their own lifestyle, customs, and values. An important component of their cultural heritage is Cant, a communicative code composed of Cant lexical items and an English morphosyntactical framework and used for private, in-group conversation. Due to its oral nature, which entails that there is little written historical evidence, and the secrecy with which it is often guarded, the information about it is very limited. This thesis asks what folk linguistics can contribute to our existing knowledge about Cant and its role in the Traveller community. Three points justify a folk linguistic perspective. Firstly, this study intends to enhance our knowledge about Cant. Due to the scarcity of material we can only find out more about it by speaking to the community. This thesis provides new material in the form of speakers? descriptions and interpretations of the nature and use of Cant. Secondl...
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/75310
Marked
Mark
Empirically derived user attributes for the design of home healthcare technologies
(2015)
Burrows, Alison; Gooberman-Hill, Rachael; Coyle, David
Empirically derived user attributes for the design of home healthcare technologies
(2015)
Burrows, Alison; Gooberman-Hill, Rachael; Coyle, David
Abstract:
Designing effective home healthcare technologies is a complex task. In order to succeed, it is important to look beyond purely technology-driven solutions and to develop technologies and services that are flexible and reflect a sensitive understanding of the diverse users of such systems. The key contribution of this paper is to introduce 15 empirically derived attributes that can help designers to build a more detailed understanding of the potential users of home healthcare systems. The attributes are spread across four broad themes: technology in the home, experiences of technology, experiences of health and care, and thoughts about smart home technology for health and care. These themes and attributes emerged from an ethnographic study in which we interviewed people across 15 households. All interviews took place in people’s homes and were supplemented by home technology tours and cultural probes. It is intended that the 15 attributes be used in conjunction with demographic and h...
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/7665
Marked
Mark
Ethnochoreology as a mediating perspective in Irish dance studies
(2012)
Foley, Catherine E.
Ethnochoreology as a mediating perspective in Irish dance studies
(2012)
Foley, Catherine E.
Abstract:
This paper addresses the ethnochoreological perspective in dance research and suggests that this perspecive assists in mediating conservative dualist approaches to dance studies in Ireland which traditionally focused on either formal descriptive accounts of dances or contextual, historical accounts. The author provides a brief overview to the development of dance anthropological and ethnochoreological approaches to dance research in the West and focuses on its development in Ireland. She addresses the notion of Cartesian dualism and other culturally constructed oppositions, such as gender, and argues for ethnochoreology as a perspective that allows for wider cultural understandings of ourselves and others through dance and human movement.
PUBLISHED
peer-reviewed
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/4295
Marked
Mark
Ethnography in and around an Algorithm
(2015)
Kavanagh, Donncha; McGarraghy, Sean; Kelly, Séamas
Ethnography in and around an Algorithm
(2015)
Kavanagh, Donncha; McGarraghy, Sean; Kelly, Séamas
Abstract:
If 'headwork' is "the conceptual work that informs ethnographic fieldwork and its various representational practices", then this paper is a piece of headwork about what an ethnography in (or around, or of) an algorithm might entail. We begin by situating this question in ethnography’s long tradition of philosophical reflection on method and representation. This reflection has been deep and cutting, and some would argue that it has evacuated ethnography of its essence, identify and value.
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/7348
Marked
Mark
Intimacy and Vulnerability among Young Men of Colour who have Sex with Men: An Ethnographic Approach to Social Networks and Public Venues
(2015)
Vasquez del Aguila, Ernesto
Intimacy and Vulnerability among Young Men of Colour who have Sex with Men: An Ethnographic Approach to Social Networks and Public Venues
(2015)
Vasquez del Aguila, Ernesto
Abstract:
This paper shows the symbolic and structural vulnerabilities that Young Men of Colour who have Sex with Men (YMCSM) confront in their everyday lives. Through the analysis of social interactions in public spaces, this paper shows some of the hidden risks that these young men face, and how these situations increases their vulnerability to HIV infection. Four situations are described as particularly risky for YMCSM: drug use, inter-generational sexual interactions, homelessness and sex work, and stigma and symbolic violence associated with their sexual orientation. This paper is based on participant observation and focus groups in several public venues in New York City. It provides insights into the different social networks and the strategies these young men use to confront the dual experience of discrimination as sexual minorities and as people of colour.
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/7537
Marked
Mark
Investigating Contexts of Use for the Development of Domestic Healthcare Technology: An Ethnographic Study
(2015)
Burrows, Alison; Noyes, Jan; Gooberman-Hill, Rachael; Coyle, David
Investigating Contexts of Use for the Development of Domestic Healthcare Technology: An Ethnographic Study
(2015)
Burrows, Alison; Noyes, Jan; Gooberman-Hill, Rachael; Coyle, David
Abstract:
Current demographic and health trends mean it is becoming imperative to rethink healthcare provision worldwide. This paper introduces SPHERE, a large-scale Interdisciplinary Research Collaboration that aims to make a contribution to addressing this challenge. Specifically, SPHERE is developing a smart home system based on a common platform of non-medical/environmental sensors to address a variety of healthcare needs. In order to achieve its goal of widespread deployment, SPHERE technology must meet the requirements of its envisaged users. In this paper we present the rationale and methodology of an ethnographic study of people's experiences of health and technology. The aim of this study was to gather rich contextual data to inform the design of meaningful and inclusive healthcare technology.
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/6615
Marked
Mark
Menopause narratives: the interplay of women's embodied experiences with biomedical discourses
(2010)
Hyde, Abbey; Nee, Jean; Howlett, Etaoine; Drennan, Jonathan; Butler, Michelle
Menopause narratives: the interplay of women's embodied experiences with biomedical discourses
(2010)
Hyde, Abbey; Nee, Jean; Howlett, Etaoine; Drennan, Jonathan; Butler, Michelle
Abstract:
Conventional approaches to menopause tend to contrast the biomedical position on menopause with women’s actual experiences of it. Rather than focusing primarily on the tensions between these perspectives (biomedical vs. lay), our emphasis here is on the impact of biomedicine in shaping participants’ perceptions of their status as menopausal. Based on interview data gathered from 39 women in Ireland, we argue that the cultural authority of biomedicine shaped participants’ experiences of the body and how they constituted their health identity. We assert that, ironically, this was particularly the case among those who most strongly contested biomedical definitions of their situation. In addition, biomedical practitioners’ definitions had a strong normalizing power in how the body was experienced. We conclude by noting that our analysis problematizes the notion of privileging “women’s experiences” as advocated by some feminist perspectives. The heavy influence of biomedical discourses i...
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/4166
Marked
Mark
Not Seeing the Joke: the Overlooked Role of Humour in Researching Television Production
(2011)
Brennan, Edward
Not Seeing the Joke: the Overlooked Role of Humour in Researching Television Production
(2011)
Brennan, Edward
Abstract:
<p>This article argues that humour can provide researchers with a unique access point into the professional cultures of media producers. By reconsidering an earlier case study, and reviewing relevant literature, it illustrates how humour can fulfil several functions in media production. Importantly, humour is a central means of performing the ‘emotional labour’ that increasingly precarious media work demands. For production research, the everyday joking and banter of media workers can provide an important and, heretofore, overlooked means of accessing culture, meaning, consensus and conflict in media organizations. The article argues that humour’s organizational role should be considered as a sensitizing concept when designing production research.</p>
http://arrow.dit.ie/aaschmedart/87
Marked
Mark
Post-privatised shop steward organisation and union renewal
(2011)
Dundon, Tony
Post-privatised shop steward organisation and union renewal
(2011)
Dundon, Tony
Abstract:
Using an ethnographic case study approach this article provides empirical evidence concerning the response of local union stewards to managerial-led change during and after the process of privatisation. Evidence supports the workplace union renewal thesis. It is suggested that the key mediating factors of a decisive ideological purpose and local leadership style provide the ingredients for union renewal. A number of wider implications are noted, in particular a gap between national trade union policies and workplace industrial relations practices
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/2080
Marked
Mark
Promise and Unrest: the Intimate Grammar of Global Care Work
(2011)
Grossman, Alan
Promise and Unrest: the Intimate Grammar of Global Care Work
(2011)
Grossman, Alan
http://arrow.dit.ie/ctmpcon/7
Marked
Mark
Refugee Agency and Autonomy in English Language Acquisition
(2008)
CARSON, LORNA ELIZABETH
Refugee Agency and Autonomy in English Language Acquisition
(2008)
CARSON, LORNA ELIZABETH
Abstract:
This article looks at an ethnographic study conducted at Integrate Ireland Language and Training1, an organization which provides English language courses for adult refugees. The research project was a qualitative, longitudinal investigation which explored the motivational role of goal-setting in adult language learners. During a twelve-month period (2003-2004), multiple data-gathering techniques were employed including participant observation, group interviews with learners, teacher interviews, attitudinal questionnaires, and archival research. The research aimed to record and to analyze the motivational impact of a curriculum designed to encourage learner autonomy. In this paper, I give a brief overview of the context of refugees in Ireland and the provision of English language training. I explore the concept of autonomy in language learning, argue that it is particularly relevant in the context of language provision for refugees, and present the work of Integrate Ireland Language...
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/16619
Marked
Mark
Riding the Practice Waves: Social Resourcing Practices During New Venture Development
(2014)
Keating, Andrew; Geiger, Susi; McLoughlin, Damien; Cunningham, Anthony C.
Riding the Practice Waves: Social Resourcing Practices During New Venture Development
(2014)
Keating, Andrew; Geiger, Susi; McLoughlin, Damien; Cunningham, Anthony C.
Abstract:
This paper investigates how early venture entrepreneurs engage in socially embedded practices to resource their firm. We contribute to an emerging literature that calls for a shift in perspective from “resource” as an object to “resourcing” as a practice. This shift entails a focus away from whom entrepreneurs know toward how they engage with their venture's social contexts. Through the analysis of an in-depth longitudinal case study of a life-science venture, we show that social resourcing practices are more reminiscent of a creative coping with ambiguous and ever-changing environments over time than of “heroic” strategizing. We explore how entrepreneurs mobilize and creatively combine their social resources at hand, seek resources through engaging with other practice nets, negotiate differences between practice nets, and reflectively adapt their resourcing practices toward emerging resource contexts in ways that we describe as “riding the practice waves” of social resourcing.
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/4951
Marked
Mark
Space and the Geographical Imagination on the Dublin Docklands’
(2012)
Sweeney, Moira
Space and the Geographical Imagination on the Dublin Docklands’
(2012)
Sweeney, Moira
Abstract:
<p>In my practice–based doctoral study <strong>Dublin Dockers, Visualising a Changing Community, </strong>I am foregrounding the application of ethnographic documentary methods and investigation in examining the world of a docker and stevedore community on Dublin's docks. Through excavating and recuperating narratives which are absent from mainstream media hegemony, the study is unraveling the transformations experienced by a stevedoring constituency as a consequence of globalisation, urban regeneration and the current recession. This paper engages with arguments for the revitalisation of our imaginations on space in the context of an audio visual and textual study of the urban and maritime Dublin dockland space.</p>
http://arrow.dit.ie/aaschmedcon/30
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